| Akado Suzunosuke | |
| 赤胴鈴之助(Akadō Suzunosuke) | |
|---|---|
| Genre | Jidaigeki,[1]swashbuckler[2] |
| Manga | |
| Written by |
|
| Published by | Shōnen Gahōsha |
| Magazine | Shōnen Gahō |
| Original run | August 1954 – December 1960 |
| Volumes | 22 |
| Radio drama | |
| |
| Live-action | |
| |
| Television drama | |
| Original network | OTV |
| Original run | September 20, 1957 – October 3, 1958 |
| Episodes | 55 |
| Television drama | |
| Original network | KRT |
| Original run | October 2, 1957 – March 25, 1959 |
| Episodes | 55 |
| Anime television series | |
| Directed by | Shigetsugu Yoshida |
| Written by |
|
| Music by |
|
| Studio | |
| Original network | Fuji Television |
| Original run | April 5, 1972 – March 28, 1973 |
| Episodes | 52 |
Akado Suzunosuke (赤胴鈴之助, Akadō Suzunosuke) is a Japanese manga series created by Eiichi Fukui and Tsunayoshi Takeuchi.[3] It was serialized from 1954 to 1960.[1][3]
It is a jidaigeki story featuring a young swordsman who confronts villains. At the time, it was seen as unusually high quality and quickly gained popularity among children.[3][1][4] The popularity of the work led to the production of a radio drama in 1957, followed by a film adaptation and two TV drama adaptations in the same year.[1][5] As its popularity subsided, the manga series ended. An anime adaptation was produced in 1972.[1]
Akado Suzunosuke tells the story of Suzunosuke Akado, a young boy who aspires to become the best swordsman in Japan. He joins the Chiba Dōjō,[a] run by Shūsaku Chiba, a renowned practitioner of the Hokushin Ittō-ryū in Edo, where he spends his days training and trying to perfect the Akado Vacuum Slash, a special technique left by his father.[1] Suzunosuke faces a variety of events, including a feud and reconciliation with senior disciple Rainoshin Tatsumaki, and a confrontation with the Kimento, which is plotting to overthrow the Edo Shogunate. He faces these hardships undaunted, continuing to follow his own path.[1]
Akado Suzunosuke was created by Eiichi Fukui, a popular manga artist and a contemporary of Osamu Tezuka, who adopted Yowamushi Suzunosuke (よわむし鈴之助, Yowamushi Suzunosuke; lit.'Suzunosuke the Coward'), a one-shot that he wrote in the past, for serialization. However, following the publication of the first episode in the magazine and the drafting of the second episode, Fukui died. As a result, Tsunayoshi Takeuchi, a newly debuted manga artist was unexpectedly tasked with continuing the manga. Takeuchi assumed responsibility for responsibility for the series, writing from the second episode through to its finale.
Akado Suzunosuke was serialized in Shōnen Gahō, a monthly shōnen manga magazine published by Shōnen Gahōsha, from the August 1954 issue to the December 1960 issue, and was collected in 22 tankōbon volumes.[1][3]
It was reprinted in 2007 by Shōnen Gahōsha and Shogakukan.[5] Shonen Gahosha faithfully reprinted the original in every detail, while Shogakukan reprinted it in A5 format, which is slightly larger than the original B6 format, for easier reading.[5]
It was released as an Ebook in 2014 and eBookJapan began distributing it.[6]
The anime adaptation was broadcast on Fuji Television Network from April 5, 1972, to March 28, 1973, for a total of 52 episodes.[2] It was co-produced by Fuji Television and Tokyo Movie,[b] with the actual production of the animation outsourced to A Production.[c][7]
The anime has a total of 52 episodes, utilizing the essence of the original manga while introducing characters who do not appear in the manga and interspersing an anime-original, road movie-like storyline in the middle of the episodes.[2] Each 30-minute episode was produced in just over a month with an animation director and two to four key animators, a pace that would be nearly impossible today.[7]
Many of the staff members were from Mushi Production and Tōei Dōga,[d] giving them a solid foundation, and the quality of the animation is high throughout the 52 episodes.[7] The main staff consists of former Tōei Dōga members: Shigetsugu Yoshida as director, Daikichiro Kusube as animation director, and Yōichi Kotabe as assistant animation director.[7] This group included many animators who would later go on to show their unique talents, such as Yoshinori Kanada and Yoshifumi Kondo.[7] The staff working on the storyboards are all people who have done epoch-making work in Japanese animation, such as Toshio Hirata, Hayao Miyazaki, and Noboru Ishiguro.[8] Among them, the work of Osamu Dezaki, who joined under the name Kuyo Sai, was notable, and he worked on 14 episodes, a quarter of the total.[8]
Nine film adaptations produced by Daiei Film were released from 1957 to 1958.[1] The lead actor was Shoji Umewaka for the first seven films, and was replaced by Taro Momoyama for the eighth and ninth films.
A radio drama adaptation aired on Radio Tokyo[e] from January 7, 1957, to February 14, 1959, with a total of 42 episodes.[1] The theme song, which would be used in subsequent film, TV dramas, and anime series, was created for the program.[1]
Two television drama adaptations were aired in 1957 on separate TV stations using the then-predominant live broadcast format.[1] The Osaka Television Broadcasting[f] version aired a total of 55 episodes from September 20, 1957, to October 3, 1958. The KR TV (Radio Tokyo Television)[g] version aired a total of 55 episodes from October 2, 1957, to March 25, 1959.